1 the noise that is made when air escapes after a plosive consonant sound: --
2 a strong hope or wish for achievement or success: --
As a moral endeavour, the documentary ambition needs no justification beyond these aspirations themselves.
Beyond the boundaries of the composer's aspirations, the tale also belongs to the chronicles of a mystery.
Objective conditions of human life limit and colour our subjective aspirations.
A world that can accommodate goalseeking behaviour, but is cognizant of the importance of network, history, relationships, cultures and aspirations.
However, the formation of a neoliberal state that combines procedural democracy with free-market oriented economic and social policies has left those aspirations stillborn.
Another kind of false consciousness - due to low aspirations - can occur in relation to the deprivation measure.
The rise of scientific-bureaucratic medicine reflects the rise (or perhaps resurgence) of political instrumentalism; in other words, it is about aspirations of control.
The intellectual was a preacher, and the world of ideas of a domain of moral certainties and ethical aspirations.